Making the Grade, which will run through the 2021 Triple Crown races, focuses on the winners or top performers of the key races, usually from the previous weekend, who could make an impact on the Triple Crown. We’ll be taking a close look at impressive winners and evaluating their chances to win classic races based upon ability, running style, connections (owner, trainer, jockey), and pedigree.
Month: November 2020
First Breeders’ Cup Classic Victory Propels Velazquez To Jockey Of The Week Honors
For jockey John Velazquez, winning two Breeders' Cup races would be special but when one of them is the Grade I Breeders' Cup Classic, it makes the day exceptional. The two Breeders' Cup victories, including the Grade I Filly and Mare Sprint, led to Jockey of the Week honors for November 2 through November 8. The award, which is voted on by a panel of racing experts, is for jockeys who are members of the Jockeys' Guild, the organization which represents more than 950 active riders in the United States as well as retired and permanently disabled jockeys.
The victory aboard the Bob Baffert-trained Authentic was the first Classic win for the 48-year-old Velazquez, who was inducted into the National Museum of Racing and Hall of Fame in 2012.
“I've been chasing this race for quite a while,” said Velazquez. “For him to do it for me is incredible. What a feeling. The older I get the more emotional I get. It worked out perfect,” added Velazquez. “Bob said to take him to the lead so he doesn't wander so much and keep his mind on running. It worked out. He did everything I wanted him to do.”
Velazquez sent the reigning Kentucky Derby winner to the front and never looked back en route to a two-length win in the $6-million Grade 1 Classic, setting a track record 10 furlongs.
The Classic victory marked the 18th Breeders' Cup win for Velazquez, who kicked off Saturday's Breeders' Cup program by piloting Gamine to a track record score by 6 1/4 lengths in the Grade 1 Filly and Mare Sprint, covering the seven-furlong distance in 1:20.20, also for Baffert.
“We knew that other horse (Serengeti Empress) would come out running, but I didn't want to give it up too easy,” Velazquez said. “I put a little pressure on because I know that filly is really tough on the lead. I made sure I was close. When I asked my filly, she was there for me.”
Velazquez was also the leading money-earning jockey for the week with $3,756,499 in purses.
Velazquez out-polled fellow riders Kendrick Carmouche who posted the most wins for the week with nine, Irad Ortiz, Jr. who won three stakes races at Keeneland including two Breeders' Cup races, Joel Rosario who also won three stakes races at Keeneland with two Breeders' Cup events and Luis Saez who won two stakes races including one Breeders' Cup race.
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Sales Resilient, But Overall Profitability Suffers Amid Pandemic
In March and April, the bloodstock sales world stood on the precipice, or so it seemed, as the Inglis Easter Yearling Sale–the first major international auction to confront the social upheaval of COVID-19–was put under severe pressure. In the event, team Inglis rose to the challenge and showed a potential way forward for other sales houses with its innovative virtual sale. It didn’t, however, escape completely unscathed, and trepidation remained high for those with horses to sell all over the Northern Hemisphere.
Six months on, we can now report that the sales went ahead–not all in their chosen venues and dates and not all with their original lineups–but horses were sold nonetheless, cash flowed so that bills will get paid and future investment funds will be found.
Remarkably, Europe’s five big yearling auctions–Arqana, Doncaster Premier, Goffs Orby and Tatts Books 1 and 2–ended up with an average price just over 14% behind where it was 12 months ago. In essence, prices in 2020 are still ahead of where they were as recently as 2015. It’s a truly miraculous turn of events considering what we thought we faced six months ago.
It wasn’t good news for everyone, though. Confidence didn’t really return until Tattersalls staged their annual yearling sale during the first two full weeks in October. By then, both the Goffs Orby and Doncaster Premier Sales–shorn of some of their big investors and with the distinct disadvantage of having to change venue and open the calendar, respectively–had suffered sizeable setbacks, their averages shrinking by 35% and 27% respectively, while their clearance rates fell by about five percentage points. And although Arqana didn’t suffer quite so badly–its average 11% shy of last year’s figure–it was really Tattersalls that saved the 2020 European yearling market. Its Book 1 provided a gloss at the elite end, but it was Book 2 that really led the recovery that spilled over into Book 3.
Tattersall Book 1 was the place to sell if your yearling was among the top 45 to 50 at the sale. For this group, the average was down only 3%, but for the next two sets of 45-50 yearlings the average fell away markedly by 19% and 25%, respectively. In fact, it was so tough lower down the order at Book 1 that there will be plenty who wished their yearling had been in Book 2. For starters, Book 2 recorded a higher clearance rate–85.3% to 84.9%–than last year. Then there’s the fact that its top three deciles (225 yearlings) were down by only 4%, 1% and 6%, respectively. And for the rest of the sale, reversals in average were for the most part kept below 10% giving Book 2 an overall average just 3% behind last year’s sale.
But we cannot just talk about the elite market. So many commercial yearlings are produced these days that many spill over into other less lucrative auctions. It is interesting to note for instance that in a normal year 76% of all yearlings sold by sub-20k stallions in Europe are auctioned outside the five main sales. Even the 20k-plus stallions have significant numbers (31%) of their yearlings sold at the non-elite sales. No one yet knows what the final implications for the yearling and nominations market will be. It looks like we will have to wait until January before we get a complete and accurate sales picture.
Even before COVID-19 arrived on the scene, there was pressure on profitability building within the European yearling market. It’s not that stallion studs have individually been hiking fees recently; it’s the fact that the number of high-priced stallions on European rosters in the past six years is at an all-time high. Ten years ago only 13 of the top 30 stallions in Britain and Ireland assessed by book quality stood at £20,000/€20,000 or more. By 2019 that number had risen to 22 out of 30. The cheapest fee of the top 30 stallions in 2009 was £15,000 and by 2019 it had risen to £30,000.
To illustrate the point, we can use the elite European Sales. In 2018, 2,111 yearlings were sold at these five sales and 67% made enough to cover their sire’s advertised fee, plus £20,000 in production costs. A year later, the 2,133 yearlings sold included 65% that were profitable by the same criteria – down two percentage points. This year, whilst it is excellent news that as many as 1,973 found new homes from the five sales, the margins were squeezed so much that only 58% cleared the advertised-fee-plus-£20k hurdle. We can, of course, lay most of the blame for this seven-point drop on the COVID-19 disruption, but there’s a good chance that the number would have been down anyway.
There have been precious few silver linings to the COVID-19 cloud. For the bloodstock industry, it will surely hasten a fundamental review of the supply and demand of commercial young stock over the next few years, with implications for everyone in connected markets.
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Irish Hill & Dutchess Views Stallions Announces 2021 Stud Fees
New York stallion farm Irish Hill & Dutchess Views Stallions has released its 2021 stud fees and roster. Headlined by War Dancer (War Front) at $7,500, the stallion roster includes five stallions that previously stood with Irish Hill & Dutchess Views Stallions and one new sire, Lookin At Lee (Lookin At Lucky), a multiple Grade I-placed placed millionaire and 2017 GI Kentucky Derby runner-up who will begin his career at the Saratoga area stallion station and stand for $6,500 LFSN.
He joins a roster that boasts leading New York sire Big Brown (Boundary, $5,000), current leading New York freshman sire War Dancer, perennial leading New York sire of winners Bellamy Road (Concerto, $5,000) and 2019 leading New York freshman sire Majestic City (City Zip, $2,500). Weekend Hideaway (Speightstown, $2,500) will have his first runners hit the track in 2022.
The stallions are physically located at Irish Hill Century farm located at 221 Burke Road, Stillwater, NY 12170 and are available for inspection by potential breeders on request. Irish Hill & Dutchess Views Stallions will work closely with breeders to mitigate any COVID-19 impacts while offering incentives for qualifying mares and multiple mare discounts across the entire roster. Due to COVID-19 restrictions, Irish Hill & Dutchess Views Stallions will be holding a Virtual Stallion Show this year, which will be made available on Facebook, Twitter and on the farm’s website.
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